Category: Book Reviews
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Nahoonkara
Unlike many writers who write the same story over and over, Grandbois’ first two books have been radically different. His third book, Nahoonkara, follows the pattern. It’s a pensive cacophony of personalities and perception. It’s part western and part magical realism—think Gabriel Garcia L’Amour—and part Native American Spirit Journey framed by the ramblings of a…
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Marry or Burn
Valerie Trueblood’s book of short stories, Marry or Burn, makes substantial demands on its readers’ attention, for which they are repaid manifold. Unlike the seven non-consecutive chapters of Trueblood’s Seven Loves (Little, Brown and Co., 2006), these twelve stories, as a whole or even separately, do not concern a central character and his or her…
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I Have Touched You
The “linked stories” in Gregory Sherl’s collection, I Have Touched You, actually lie somewhere between confessional thought fragment and prose poetry, but they come together to create a mosaic of Sherl’s vision of contemporary intimacy in shades of gray. Gray because the voice of Sherl’s narrator comes to the reader from within his own private…
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The Sum of His Syndromes
In the unusual novel, The Sum of His Syndromes, K.B. Dixon’s central character David installs himself (presumably with pen and paper) in his company’s sixth-floor men’s room and then treats the reader to his scatterings: philosophic aphorisms, overheard conversations, observations about co-workers, comments about the frustrations of his self-published writer friend Peter, and repeated mentions…
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Peter Never Came
Today is Monday. Tomorrow will be Tuesday. Then comes Wednesday and so on and so forth. Time ticks on and we are forced to experience each new day, feel ourselves transformed by the passing of time. We may be able to stand still or take steps backward, but we cannot avoid being swept up in…
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Impotence
On the cover, a handful of pills piled into the crevice made by the cupping of two gloved hands. Inside, a novel of individuals and families, of their different medications, both prescribed and over-the-counter, and the myriad problems these “typical” Americans use as crutches. The novel is also an attempt to capture and reveal the…
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My Business is to Create
A dying man on his bed, feverish, sick with liver pain, exhausted from years of illness and poverty. He knows he hasn’t much time and yet he does not rest, he does not lie back and simply think over his life. He is still alive, and life equals work. He cannot stop working. Paper to…
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The Orange Suitcase
If you stand in front of the hors d’oeuvres table and nibble all night long, never making it to the main buffet with the meat and potatoes, you might walk away sated… stuffed, even. But did you have dinner? Maybe not. Of course, a person could live on appetizers a good long, happy time. Joseph…
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Blood Lotus #19
Outlaws and Outsiders is the theme of Blood Lotus #19, an online quarterly which has been publishing poetry, fiction and other hybrid forms since 2006. The pieces collected here, presented in an elegant and streamlined online viewer, one of the best this reviewer has ever seen, are as much a celebration of the individual at…
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How to Escape from a Leper Colony
“Man, who the hell is they and who the frig is us?” asks one of the characters in Tiphanie Yanique’s story “Kill the Rabbits” from her 2010 collection How to Escape from a Leper Colony. The phrase “kill the rabbits” comes from a popular song, and it means, one character explains to another, to kill…
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Where We Going, Daddy
What are the parents of handicapped children allowed to say about their experience? That it is hard, of course, that they are sad, yes. But how about a father admitting that he feels like closing his eyes and pressing a little harder on the gas pedal when driving the kids home from school? This avowal…
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Gasoline
New York. New Year’s Eve. Part One of Quim Monzo’s Gasoline begins with Heribert Julia, a successful contemporary artist in preparation for a large gallery show. Heribert has three weeks to complete a staggering number of paintings. We are told this usually wouldn’t be a problem, only now he can’t seem to focus. Moving forward…